[5] Hermida-Rivera, H., Kerman, T.T. (2025). Binary Self-Selective Voting Rules, Journal of Public Economic Theory, 27 (3), e70039.
[4] Senkov, M., Kerman, T.T. (2025). Persuasion with simplistic worldviews, Theory and Decision, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11238-025-10046-y.
[3] Kerman, T.T., Tenev A.P. (2025). Information design for weighted voting, Economic Theory 79 (3), 809–852.
[2] Kerman, T.T., Herings, P.J.J., Karos, D. (2024). Persuading sincere and strategic voters, Journal of Public Economic Theory, 26 (1), e12671.
[1] Herings, P.J.J., Karos, D., and Kerman, T.T. (2024). Belief inducibility and informativeness, Theory and Decision, 96 (4), 517-553.
Planned vs. Dynamic Obsolescence with Vyacheslav Arbuzov and Anastas P. Tenev
Bayesian Persuasion in Networks: Divisibility and Network Irrelevance with Anastas P. Tenev and Yevgeny Tsodikovich (under review)
Persuasion Gains and Losses from Peer Communication with Anastas P. Tenev and Konstantin Zabarnyi (under review)
Persuading Communicating Voters with Anastas P. Tenev (unpublished manuscript; superseded working paper)
Best Paper Award at GamesNet Young Scholars' Competition
Partition and Persuade (with Dinko Dimitrov and Anastas P. Tenev)
Persuading Skeptics (with Anastas P. Tenev and Yevgeny Tsodikovich)
Communication Styles in Persuasion (with Manuel Foerster, Philipp Külpmann and Lina Lozano)
Farsighted Stable Voting Rules (with Héctor Hermida-Rivera)
Persuasion with Costly Recognition (with Kemal Kıvanç Aköz)
Dissertation
I obtained my PhD from Maastricht University, School of Business and Economics in 2021. My advisors were P. Jean-Jacques Herings and Dominik Karos.
Bayesian Persuasion: Elections and Informativeness of Beliefs (link)
My Erdős number is 3.